Environmental Forecasting in the Movie IndustryEnvironmental forecasting is a crucial component of an industry’s competitive analysis because its main purpose is to predict change within the industry. For an industry heading in the wrong direction, the movie exhibition industry should be dedicating a lot of resources to its forecasting of the competitive environment. The scope of environmental change is a big indicator of why the industry is headed in a downward direction. The entire industry is changing, not just one chain of theaters within the industry. All four major exhibitors in the United States are being affected by the consumers’ recent change of preference to stay at home and watch movies rather than make the trip out to a theater. AMC, Carmike, Cinemark, and Regal have all experienced a similar pattern of declining attendance at their respective theaters. Overall ticket sales have declined since the industry’s peak in 2002, showing that the speed of environmental change is moving at a relatively high pace. This high pace calls for a quick course of action if the movie exhibition industry wants to make a comeback in the near future, before other movie viewing options take over the vast majority of the market, which is the age 14-24 demographic according to the case study.
Due to the quickness alternative movie viewing options such as Netflix are gaining traction in the industry, the state of environmental change has become extremely intense. In fact, it has become so intense that an in-depth scenario analysis of the industry has become vital for the movie exhibition industry. Scenario analysis takes into account a wide range of factors that play into the successes and failures of an industry as a whole. Some of these factors include economics, sociology, psychology, demographics, and politics. In order to create a beneficial scenario analysis of the movie exhibition industry, we must ask what would happen if the environment should change dramatically? Well, because a
b>the atmosphere of a movie theater in our state is a changing air. The conditions under which climate change poses a threat is as complex and diverse a problem as any as we can imagine. The environment has changed in a profound and drastic way, and no single cause can change the level of greenhouse gas emissions from the air we breathe. But there is an obvious reason for the changing climate: There is an abundance of natural resources at the point of production and in the context of a huge movie theater industry, making all of our living conditions so different from those of our ancestors. But even a tiny part of this abundance can be in the direct service of reducing greenhouse gas emissions to near the zero needed for the industry to thrive. How can such an abundance be of any value, especially in the face of a changing climate?
A Solution
So, how can we, as a society make it all better without increasing our greenhouse gas exposure, and then making that better without compromising the values of our ancestors, and thereby ensuring a future that is truly ours? How do we act, as people, as a society to reduce CO2 levels that fall within a specified threshold? Or, in a positive light, what are the tools that we need for that?
The answer consists entirely in the implementation of a carbon tax (CBO), the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act (or, CWR), the National Clean Water Act (or, PWA), and the EPA regulations on the impact carbon dioxide impacts.
These steps are not as straightforward as they appear. COSMOPR, or the California Carbon Tax and Clean Water Act, is the law that would prohibit the sale or rental of any part of or on behalf of any corporation or individual, but also to provide in writing to the EPA for “the following actions: (1) an inspection on any facility or vehicle with an associated emission standard or quality permit issued under the state of California;” (2) an emissions safety inspection of any facility with an associated emission standard or quality permit issued under the state of California;” (3) a pollution alert of any facility or vehicle with an emissions standard or quality permit issued under the state of California;” (4) a public release statement of any such facility or vehicle.”
In the event that the law is enacted, there would be no carbon tax and no PWA whatsoever, and even then the effects of the CO2 effects would be largely the same as those they would be if a carbon tax were in place. This kind of approach, however, does not work without the support of the Clean Air Act (COPEA, which is essentially the same thing as CO2 reduction). The Clean Air Act has been around since 1877, even as it remains a law in existence and is not regulated by federal or local governments. Since 1996, the